Originally from Fakenham in Suffolk, Saxe became a freeman of Colchester in 1430-1.
Saxe began to play a part in the affairs of the borough within a few years of becoming a burgess there. In September 1436 he was one of the electors of Colchester’s coroners, clavigers, town clerk and serjeants, and six years later he became a councillor. He subsequently held all the other principal offices in the borough. During his first term as bailiff John Mowbray, duke of Norfolk, wrote to his fellow bailiff, William Lecche*, and other prominent burgesses ‘pro Willelmi Saxe’, but the contents of the duke’s letter are unknown. Saxe entered his only Parliament in 1455 and he was still an MP when (between the first and second sessions of this assembly) he began his third term as bailiff. He was again elected bailiff on 30 June 1457, as a replacement for John Beche* who had died three days earlier, and he was re-elected to the same office at the expiry of this short term in the following September. He disappears from view after the 1450s, and he was certainly dead by August 1464.
